Author: Robert KilwardbyPublisher:ISBN:Size: 73.28 MBFormat: PDF, ePub, DocsView: 1591DownloadRead Online
Reply. Since Augustine and Aristotle clearly seem to agree with the earlier
reasons (paras.6-16), it seems to me that that side of the argument is more
correct. For I think that the imaginative part of the mind entirely lacks images of
corporeal things until a man uses his senses. 24. In reply to the first argument (
para. 1 7),. 20. Conf., x, 11 (8); CCSL 27, 164 (1-5) 21. Phil. con., metr. 4; CCSL
94, 98 (33)-99 (40). My translation is taken from The Consolation of Philosophy (Penguin Classics) ...

Author: K. P. HarringtonPublisher: University of Chicago PressISBN: 9780226317137Size: 53.75 MBFormat: PDF, ePub, DocsView: 393DownloadRead Online
There are two English translations in the Loeb Classical Library, and the more
recent, by S. J. Tester (Boethius: The Consolation of Philosophy, London and
Cambridge, Mass., 1973), is the better. There is also an English translation by
V. E. Watts in the Penguin Classics (Boethius: The Consolation of Philosophy,
Harmondsworth, 1969). A concordance has been prepared by L. Cooper (A
Concordance to Boethius: The Five Theological Tractates and the Consolation ofPhilosophy, ...